China’s industrial output is contracting at the fastest pace since the depths of the global financial crisis, with knock-on effects spreading across the Far East.
“It just keeps getting worse,” said Alistair Thornton and Xianfang Ren from
IHS Global Insight. “The government has underestimated the pace of the
slowdown and is behind the curve.”
The HSBC/Markit manufacturing index for China fell to 47.6 in August, the
lowest since the onset of Great Recession in late 2008. Inventories are
rising. The index for new export orders fell to the lowest since March 2009.
“Beijing must step up policy easing to stabilise growth,” said Hongbin Qu
from HSBC.
China’s official PMI manufacturing index – weighted to big companies – also
fell through the contraction line of 50, though services are holding up
better.
Evidence of a hard landing over the summer is becoming clearer. Rail volumes
fell 8.2pc in July from a year before. The Japanese group Komatsu said its
exports of hydraulic excavators to China – a proxy gauge for Chinese
construction – fell 48pc in August from a year before.
READ MORE: http://www.telegraph.co.uk/finance/economics/9518859/Global-crisis-moves-East-as-China-suffers-rapid-downturn.html
READ MORE: http://www.telegraph.co.uk/finance/economics/9518859/Global-crisis-moves-East-as-China-suffers-rapid-downturn.html
No comments:
Post a Comment